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Archive for the ‘vanguard party’ Category

Unity and struggle: How a communist core formed in Tsarist Russia

Posted by kasama on May 18, 2012

The 1897 founding of the League of Struggle for the Emancipation of the Working Class.

How should communists be organized? What are appropriate formation for action, debate and consolidation — in the inevitably different stages of a revolution’s life?

For some people even asking that question is heresy — since a very particular form of vanguard party is considered universal and a “settled question.”

This universalization of organizational questions is rooted in a particular reading of Russian and German history: It says Lenin separated off his Bolsheviks in a tight democratic centralist independent party early in the 1900s, and this allowed his forces the initiative and compactness they needed to contend for power in 1917. By contrast, it is said that Rosa Luxemburg and her Spartacist communists failed to break with German social democracy early enough — and so they were unable to consolidate or contend successfully, as communists, in the crisis of 1918-19.

This universalization has led small communist groupings to from small hostile sect-like groups — that declare themselves pre-party formations, or even parties — and that declare other parallel currents to be hopelessly corrupt. 

We have discussed this reading (or rewriting) of Russian history before here on Kasama — particularly in the following posts and threads:

Posting this new piece  is intended to continue engaging this once “settled” question — with a sharp eye on our needs today. Posting it is not intended as an endorsement by Kasama of historical claims or political conclusions made by the author.

This piece first appeared in the Weekly Worker (Britain) on May 17. 

* * * * * * * * * * *

How Lenin’s party became (Bolshevik)

By Lars T. Lih

From 1898 on, there existed a political party called the Rossiiskaia sotsial-demokraticheskaia rabochaia partiia (RSDRP), or Russian Social Democratic Worker Party. Rossiiskaia means “Russian” in the sense of citizens of the Russian state, as opposed to russkaia, which refers to ethnic Russians. Of course, the party title made no reference to either of its two later factions, Mensheviks and Bolsheviks.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, comintern, communism, Communist Party, Lars T. Lih, Lenin, Soviet history, theory, V.I. Lenin, vanguard party | 1 Comment »

Unsettled questions of communist organization

Posted by Mike E on January 25, 2012

by Mike Ely

Chegitz writes:

“…no form of organization is immune from degenerating into something awful.”

And he gives the example of the collapse of the Socialist Party (which he has been part of) — which was constructed along different (more loose and anarchic) lines than the mini-parties we have otherwise been discussing.

I think Chegitz’s point is true, and its implications are worth exploring.

And this includes forms like the commune or soviet forms of governance by representative mass democracy — which solve some problems, but exist in the context of dynamics that inevitably create new and ongoing problems. And it is true for the vanguard party, both in the forms we are familiar with, but also in future forms of core organization that we might imagine or build.

Pointing out the organizational problems with previous mini-parties (and their peculiar versions of democratic centralism) also does not mean there is are necessarily organizational solutions to those problems.

If you have evidence of a form of organization producing troubling dynamics — the solution may involve some other form of organization, but let’s not assume that changes of form provide some simple, definitive corrective.

There may be better forms (political procedures, habits, structures)  — better for our purposes, better for our particular moment or our current stage of development — but the solution (to becoming exhausted, uncreative, marginalized, ossified, cultish, even corrupt) isn’t necessarily (or simply) to imagine some pre-figured and presumably immune alternative form(s).

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Posted in >> analysis of news, communism, Maoism, mass line, Mike Ely, vanguard party | 14 Comments »

Democracy and centralism? Yes, sure, but….

Posted by Mike E on January 24, 2012

The ideas of the rank-and-file are more than just raw material for leadership decision-making. Democracy involves elements of real power and ongoing accountability.

by Mike Ely

How should communists and revolutionaries be organized? Even asking that ruffles some feathers — since some communist currents have considered this a “settled question.”

Well, we should un-settle it — problematize it — for the simple reason that the  idea of a single “universalized” model of revolutionary organization has been a bad idea.

Its flaws and illusions have been revealed over the last decades — including in the grandiosity and self-delusion of various small self-declared “parties” within the U.S.

There are a number of issues involved — which we are only starting to touch on. But for now, we are exploring the communist organizational concept of “democratic centralism” (DC) — both what it means and whether it should be embraced as a common approach.

We have discussed how it got “settled” in the discussions of the new-born Third Communist International (between 1921 and 1924) and how the form of democratic centralism was further modified — especially in the “Bolshevization” campaigns of the late 1920s.

Now, Let’s go beyond the historical question of how specific organizational structures and processes got codified (“settled”) — let’s explore some of the concepts that pass as “settled,” their justifications and lessons.

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Posted in >> analysis of news, comintern, communism, Communist Party, Mao Zedong, Maoism, Mike Ely, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism, vanguard party | 106 Comments »

Comintern’s democratic centralism: A previous conception

Posted by kasama on January 24, 2012

The Comintern decided that all communist organizations in the world should have the same name, the same structure, the same organizational principles and the same approach to controversies.

To reconceive communist views, it is valuable to have some sense of the previous conceptions.

Here is a quick and concentrated presentation of the previous communist view of organization — codified by the Third Communist International. This essay is written by J. Peters, as a chapter within the “The Communist Party: A Manual of Organization” published by the CPUSA in 1935.

We also have to evaluate the distance between what is espoused here (as principles and procedures) and how things REALLY worked. It would be silly to be taken in by lip-service in politics. For example: Once all parties are required to carry out decisions of the Comintern, and once it is announced (see below) that members do not “question” such decisions… then what is the purpose or domain of internal discussion and democratic processes? Once leaders are picked by the International, then what is the meaning of elaborate plans to elect them within the party?

Basic Principles of Party Organization

by J. Peters

The Communist Party is organized in such a way as to guarantee, first, complete inner unity of outlook; and, second, combination of the strictest discipline with the widest initiative and independent activity of the Party membership. Both of these conditions are guaranteed because the Party is organized on the basis of democratic centralism.

DEMOCRATIC CENTRALISM

Democratic centralism is the system according to which:

1. All leading committees of the Party, from the Unit Bureaus up to the highest committees, are elected by the membership or delegates of the given Party organization.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, comintern, Soviet history, vanguard party | 8 Comments »

New Zealand 4: Questioning fixed sect-like models

Posted by Mike E on January 21, 2012

Zinoviev's rules: a universalized party form for all countries and all moments

“I don’t believe in “Leninism” as it is usually understood today – or what Louis Proyect more accurately refers to as “Zinovievism”, after the 1920s leader of the Communist International who obliged foreign communist parties to adhere to a particularly narrow interpretation of how the Russian Bolsheviks worked.”

“The clear record of success shows that a small sect of ideologues, outside of the most intimate association with the class struggle (including any “full-time revolutionaries”) only has success in becoming a bigger sect, and then crumbling later on. The question of whether it propagates its ideas is a different one.

“A small intellectual group can function as a “think tank”, and perform valuable ideological work. But unless intimately linked to the class struggle as it is happening here and now, it will decompose into sectarianism in the way Duncan Hallas would have understood it – the important thing becomes “defending the ideas”, rather than making the ideas useful to change social reality. In the jargon of science, that’s called a “degenerating research programme”, and the path to becoming a religious rather than a political group.”

“Let us be more concrete. Backroom dealings, manipulations, telling “acceptable fictions” to keep people enthusiastic, winning arguments by force of personality, using psychological arguments to discredit dissenters or simply not inviting them to the meetings any more, making excuses for or outright denying the mistakes or even crimes of “leading cadre”, declaring defeats to be victories or declaring them to be all the fault of unreliable allies,. is not the way to “build cadre”. “

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, environment, Socialism, vanguard party | 26 Comments »

How one Communist organizational model got universalized

Posted by Mike E on January 21, 2012

Zinoviev's rules: a universalized party form for all countries and all moments was finalized during the campaign called "Bolshevization"

The following post combines  includes a few excerpts from an essay by Louis Proyect called “The Comintern and the German Communist Party” with a few explanatory [notes] in brackets. Louis’ much longer piece can be read by clicking on this link.

This quick outline is not intended as in-depth examination or summation of communist organizational history — but merely gives readers a sketch, a starting point, for understanding how it came to be assumed (in several distinct stages and leaps over the 1920s) that a particular and very specific organizational form was (down to minor details) universal for all countries and all times. It also describes, briefly, how it  the Comintern center in Moscow came to have final say over the decisions of communists (and their parties) in each country (a decision and practice which was to have disastrous effects in one favorable or complex situation after another, starting with the great debacles of Germany’s 1923 revolutionary attempts.)

* * * * * *

How did we end up with the organizational model called Marxism-Leninism, or alternately, democratic centralism?

The tendency has been to assume that there is an unbroken line between the small, sectarian groups of today and the Bolshevik Party of the turn of the century. When organizational changes have been made, the assumption is that these are refinements to Lenin’s party.

For example, if Bukharin published ruthless criticisms of Lenin’s position on the national question in the newspaper “The Star”, an émigré Bolshevik paper, we have tended to assume that this was an anomaly. The essence of Leninism is to defend a unitary political line in the official party newspaper and Bukharin’s “indiscipline” was a sign of immature Bolshevism rather than a confirmation of its true spirit.

Tracing the evolution of Lenin’s organizational approach to the rigid, monolithic models of today requires an examination of official Comintern documents of the early 1920s since these became the guidelines for organizing Communist Parties. Most “Marxist-Leninist” parties of today regard this period as a link in the chain between the historic Bolshevik Party and what passes for Leninism today. Rather than seeing these Comintern documents as a distortion of historic Bolshevism, we have tended to regard them as hagiography.

Part of the problem is that Lenin gave his official blessing to these documents and this somehow gives them a hallowed status. It is time to examine them on their own merits.

[Note: Lenin proposed 19 "Terms for admission" to the communist internationalin July 1920, in order to exclude reformist social democratic elements, and those who insisted on remaining in a common party with them. A month later, the Comintern adopted an expanded version, the famous "21 Conditions." This contains one of the first discussions of democratic centralism as a necessary foundation of communist organization, while connecting a declared need for militarized centralism with "the present epoch of acute civil war." Condition 17 says that all parties must adopt the same name "Communist Party of xxxx."  The last article says: "Party members who reject in principle the obligations and theses laid down by the Communist International shall be expelled from the Party. ]

1921 decision to enforce one model

The first clear statement on organizational guidelines were contained in the July 12, 1921 Theses on the Structure of Communist Parties, submitted to the Third Congress of the Comintern. W. Koenen, a German delegate, confessed that they were hastily drafted and were referred without further discussion to a commission. Two days later, they were passed unanimously without discussion. The purpose of the theses was to impose a uniform model on Communist Parties worldwide.

For example, they state that

“to carry out daily party work every member should as a rule belong to a small working group, a committee, a commission, a fraction, or a cell. Only in this way can party work be distributed, conducted, and carried out in an orderly fashion.”

Of course, what this led to everywhere is the immediate creation of fractions or cells. Anybody who has been a member of a “Marxist-Leninist” group will be familiar with this approach to political work.

Nobody has ever thought critically about what it means to have a “cell” or a “fraction” in a union or mass movement that speaks with the same voice on behalf of a single tactical orientation, but nevertheless the rule–hardly discussed at the Congress–became law.

Poor Lenin was trying to sort out all sorts of problems that year and probably didn’t have the minutiae of organizational resolutions upper-most in his mind, but there is some evidence that these sorts of rigid guidelines did not sit well with him.

A year later, at the Fourth Congress, Lenin offered some critical comments on them:

“At the third congress in 1921 we adopted a resolution on the structure of communist parties and the methods and content of their activities. It is an excellent resolution, but it is almost entirely Russian, that is to say, everything in it is taken from Russian conditions. That is its good side, but it is also its bad side, bad because scarcely a single foreigner–I am convinced of this, and I have just re-read it-can read it.

“Firstly, it is too long, fifty paragraphs or more. Foreigners cannot usually read items of that length.

“Secondly, if they do read it, they cannot understand it, precisely because it is too Russian…it is permeated and imbued with a Russian spirit.

“Thirdly, if there is by chance a foreigner who can understand it, he cannot apply it…

“My impression is that we have committed a gross error in passing that resolution, blocking our own road to further progress. As I said, the resolution is excellent, and I subscribe to every one of the fifty paragraphs. But I must say that we have not yet discovered the form in which to present our Russian experience to foreigners, and for that reason the resolution has remained a dead letter. If we do not discover it, we shall not go forward.”

This resolution, which was composed in haste and which Lenin described as “too Russian”, was never subjected to the sort of critical evaluation that he proposed.

The opposite process occurred. The rigid, schematic organizational forms were not only accepted, but turned even more rigid and schematic. Part of the explanation for this is that Lenin himself died and nobody in the Communist Party of the Soviet Union had the sort of subtle understanding that he did about such questions.

The party hack Zinoviev became the supreme arbiter of organizational questions and took the communist movement in exactly the opposite direction. The Comintern ended up proposing organizational guidelines that were even “more Russian” than the ones that were adopted in 1921.

The explanation for this is twofold.

The party leadership–including all factions left and right–understood only the outward forms of the Bolshevik Party rather than its inner spirit. Also, the reversals in the class struggle in the early 1920s–especially in Germany–tended to create a crisis atmosphere in the Russian party and the Comintern. Under such conditions, the tendency is to circle the wagons and enforce ideological uniformity on the basis of the orientation of the current leadership. Criticism is considered “anti-party” and ultimately an expression of alien class forces.

[Note: the Fifth Congress of the Comintern was its  "Bolshevization" congress (June-July 1924 six months after lenins death). This is where leaps were made in adopting  a specific monolithic model universally -- with the argument that this organizational form applied generally, and had been key to Bolshevik success, and that it alone conformed to communist views on discipline, decision-making, secrecy and combative unity It also envisioned the Communist International itself increasingly as a single world party, with disciplined decision-making on a world scale.]

The Statutes of the Communist International adopted at the fifth congress were a rigid, mechanical set of rules for building Communist Parties. All of the Communist Parties were subordinate to the Comintern and members of the parties had to obey all decisions of the Comintern. The world congress of the Comintern would decide the most important programmatic, tactical and organizational questions of the Comintern as a whole and its individual sections….

The Statutes also included the sort of ridiculous measures that mark most of the sect-cults of today. For example, statute 35 declares that:

“Members of the CI may move from one country to another only with the consent of the central committee of the section concerned. Communists who have changed their domicile are obliged to join the section of the country in which they reside. Communists who move to another country without the consent of the CC of their section may not be accepted as members of another section of the CI.”…

Compare these unbending strictures with the norms of the Bolshevik Party. In the Bolshevik Party, there was no such thing as formal membership. A Bolshevik was simply somebody who agreed with the general orientation of Iskra. Nobody had to get permission to transfer from one Bolshevik branch to another because such a concept was alien to the way the free-wheeling Bolsheviks functioned.

Even more insidious than the Statutes were the Theses of the Fifth Congress on the Propaganda Activities of the CI and its sections. This document sets in concrete the methodology of dividing every serious political disagreement into a battle between the two major classes in society. It states:

“Struggles within the CI are at the same time ideological crises within the individual parties. Right and left political deviations, deviations from Marxism-Leninism, are connected with the class ideology of the proletariat.

“Manifestations of crisis at the second world congress and after were precipitated by ‘left infantile sicknesses’, which were ideologically a deviation from Marxism-Leninism towards syndicalism….The present internal struggles in some communist parties, the beginning of which coincided with the October defeat in Germany, are ideological repercussions of the survivals of traditional social-democratic ideas in the communist party. The way to overcome them is by the BOLSHEVIZATION OF THE COMMUNIST PARTIES. Bolshevization in this context means the final ideological victory of Marxism-Leninism (or in other words Marxism in the period of imperialism and the epoch of the proletarian revolution) over the ‘Marxism’ of the Second International and the syndicalist remnants.”

So the legacy of the Fifth World Congress of the Comintern was organizational rigidity and ideological conformity. This has been the unexamined heritage of the Marxist-Leninist movement since the 1920s….

[Note: The campaign of Bolshevization elevated a particular form of factory cell organization to universal status, and condemned cell organization along community lines. This was justified as a critque of electoralism -- since community cells also functioned as ward structure during electoral mobilizations. But it also reinforced a growing assumption that communist work was wedded to trade union organizing and economic struggle -- so that a shift to factory only organization was connect to assumptions about the role and importance of strikes and unionization. And this too was assumed to be universal -- even if the Comintern would soon become more rooted in many different kinds of countries, including colonial ones where workplace communist structures were far from centerstage.]

The [American] party was re-organized on the basis of factory cells and a rigid set of organizational principles were adopted. For example, it stipulated that

“Wherever three or more members, regardless of their nationality or present federation membership, are found to be working in the same shop, they shall be organized into a shop nucleus. The nucleus collects the Party dues and takes over all the functions of a Party unit.”

What strikes one immediately is that there is absolutely no consideration in the resolution about whether or not a factory-based party unit makes political sense. It is simply a mechanical transposition of Comintern rules, which in themselves are based on an undialectical understanding of Lenin’s party.

Posted in >> analysis of news, Germany, Lenin, Russia, Socialism, Soviet history, Stalin and Stalinism, vanguard party | 48 Comments »

New Zealand 1: Revolutionary work without a workers’ upsurge

Posted by Mike E on January 19, 2012

“In short, our comrades assert that given the lack of a mass workers’ movement in New Zealand today, communist party-building is futile….

“It is clearly true that the Workers Party does not currently live up to its name. It is not a mass workers’ party, but a propaganda group….

“Recognising these limitations does not justify dissolving the group, rather we must sharpen our perspective and improve our practice.”

Kasama has received the following essay from members of the New Zealand Workers Party. It is part of a discussion that has gone on, within their party, over the last year — following the resignation and apparent pessimism by their party’s entire previous leadership core — leaving the organization in the hands of a determined cadre of younger people.

They have published this essay, in part, to engage the New Zealand’s Socialist Worker activists who have expressed their own views on these contradictions, including recently in “Goodbye Lenin?” and “Towards Ecosocialism.”

On the party question

by Ian Anderson

On February the 4th 2011, in the lead-up to our partys’ first internal conference of the year, a cross-section of leading comrades posted a statement resigning from the Workers Party. This statement argued that communist ‘party-building’ is impossible in the present conditions. As this statement raises important questions of political line that confront many communist and radical groups, it is necessary to engage with it; ultimately, to justify the very existence of communist organisations.

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Posted in Marxist theory, New Zealand, vanguard party, working class | 21 Comments »

One Struggle: Anti-capitalist organization as a level of unity

Posted by kasama on September 6, 2011

Kasama has received this position paper from the One Struggle collective in Florida — issued in September 2011. This initiative is highly welcome — because of the importance of pressing ahead with forms of revolutionary movement and organization — and debating what those forms should be. One Struggle is organized on the basis of this concept of “intermediate level.”

Kasama is eager to host such an ongoing  discussion of forms of organization, and urges everyone to dig in.

Toward an Anti-Capitalist/Anti-Imperialist Mass Movement:

Organizing at the Intermediate Level

by One Struggle

Mass movements can not be conjured from thin air or willed into being, no matter how correct our ideas or determined our hearts. They arise in response to intolerable social problems, congeal through collective practice and theoretical work, and harden through continuous, escalating struggle.

In the U.S., as in many parts of the world, the 1960s saw the birth of a radical mass movement with revolutionary currents running through it. It didn’t burst onto the scene fully formed, but developed through twists and turns, suffering painful lessons, betrayals, mistakes and defeats on the way. It also celebrated victories which, like waves pushed by storm winds, grew ever larger and more powerful until the idea of revolution rose in the public consciousness as a tangible possibility.

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Posted in >> analysis of news, Communist Party, One Struggle collective, organizing, vanguard party | 19 Comments »

Red Papers 1: Calling for communist collectives

Posted by kasama on September 6, 2011

Intro by Mike Ely

Several people asked to have this 1969 Red Papers call for communist collectives posted from – so its ideas (and our own ideas!) can be discussed in their own thread.

This was a rather ground-breaking 1969 document — that shaped (in many ways) the formation of the previous communist movement.

It set important terms for an emerging communist movement — and strongly influenced even the radicals who went on to form other, opposing communist trends. And of course it became the basis on which the Bay Area Revolutionary Union grew into the national Revolutionary Union.

The document gives a sense of how that generation of communists’ “basis of unity” was being developed — and how  communist collectives started formed.

We will excerpt  the section on forming collectives, then follow that with the full document.

The power of a call

But first a few introductory comments….

I want to mention (again) the kind of impact a document like this can have. Lots of people were at that moment (1969) coming out of more liberal or at least less consolidated radical organizations — and were looking for a way to move forward. Red Papers 1 dropped at the same moment that SDS fell apart.

When I received (from afar) a copy of Red Papers 1, I was a seventeen-year-old college freshman. I read it over and over until the print started to fade — and until the many strange and difficult concepts were burned into my brain. It left me as a fierce partisan of its proposals. And I worked to circulate Red Papers 1 and 2 with everyone I met.

A year later (under the influence of this approach) I was in a revolutionary collective off campus (with people of quite diverse radical views), and working in a shoe factory. Our main work was organizing white working class youth to fight the system in ways inspired by the Black Panther Party, and to build a revolutionary anti-racist movement among them.

A year after that, I was in the Midwest, working with the Panthers there, and working in a steel forge.

And a year after that, I was (barely 20, but with a bit more experience) starting a protracted project with other communist organizers in the West Virginia coalfields.

These Red Papers and the line of march that they sketched took many of us in a common communist direction. It inspired us to understand the importance of a particular kind of urgent experimentation. It suggested a form of organization. It situated our work within the international communist movement of that time and within the history of previous revolutionary attempts.

We may not today write the same words. We have learned many things in the intervening year. And our conditions are quite different. But we want to aspire to the same impact, clarity and symbolic power.

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Posted in >> analysis of news, communism, Communist Party, Mike Ely, New Com. Movement, vanguard party | 1 Comment »

Essay from Prison: Proletarian or lumpen approach for Afrikan liberation in U.S.

Posted by kasama on August 30, 2011

Worker at North Carolina meat packing plant

“The revolutionary worker doesn’t swagger or boast and has little sense of ego. He or she is serious-minded and self-disciplined. The revolutionary knows that like a strike, the revolutionary struggle must be a united mass struggle, and that it will take quite some time to succeed….

“In contrast to the proletarian’s practice and outlook, the lumpen schemes and preys upon others to acquire survival needs and personal wealth, which renders him or her indifferent to the effects visited upon others and society as a whole….

Translated into the revolutionary movement, the lumpen tendency has some thinking that militant swaggering, posturing, and ”talking shit,” is acceptable behavior for revolutionaries, which is very wrong and demonstrates political immaturity and lack of a true proletarian outlook.”

* * * * * * * *

The following essay recently appeared on the Democracy and Class Struggle — with the following introduction:

“Democracy and Class Struggle publishes this paper of Comrade Kevin “Rashid” Johnson because a lot of the message in this article is relevant to the struggle in Britain in 2011. The question of a Vanguard Party and its engagement with the Lumpen Proletariat is addressed in this article,these are key questions in the current Uprising in Britain in 2011.”

Kasama is sharing this essay here without (as usual) endorsing this specific analysis. We are not previously aware of this organization, New Afrikan Black Panther Party. On Rashid’s own site the original name of this essay is “The New Afrikan Black Panther Party – Prison Chapter: Our Line.” More on Rashid and his writings can also be found on kersplebedeb‘s valuable website.

By Kevin ‘Rashid’ Johnson (Defense Minister, NBPP-PC)

Introduction

In this paper, we outline the political and ideological line of the New Afrikan Black Panther Party – Prison Chapter.

The NABPP-PC, an all Afrikan people’s revolutionary party, proposes through its work and example to spread its line to the general NABPP on the outside, and to all revolutionary-minded New Afrikans, and Ultimately to expand the Party into a broad international vanguard of all Afrikan people the world over. We are in full accord with the analysis set forward in ‘The Panther and the Elephant,” which this paper intends to further illuminate..

The Vanguard Party

As a vehicle for coordinating masses of people for action, organization is necessary. Planning is necessary, and so is assigning roles and tasks to those most capable of performing them, and holding them accountable for performing their assigned tasks completely and to the best of their abilities. Coordinating the activities of the active forces of the Afrikan Nation in America towards the achievement of full democracy and national liberation requires a genuine vanguard party based among the masses. No revolutionary or genuine national independence struggle has ever succeeded without a party to organize and coordinate the energy of the struggling people into focused result-oriented action.

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, Black History, Black Panthers, political prisoners, prison, revolution, vanguard party, working class | 2 Comments »

New pamphlet: Greece’s Communist Organization

Posted by kasama on August 11, 2011

Click to download

Our new Kasama pamphlet contains two essays on  the Communist Organization of Greece. — a creative revolutionary formation playing a leading role within Greece’s “movement of the squares.” It is now available for download in printable PDF format. And will soon be available in epubs format for e-readers.

Download the pdf pamphlet

The pamphlet features Eric Ribellarsi’s essay Greece’s Communist Organization: Learning to Swim in Stormy Weather.

What unfolded in Athens’ Syntagma Square was not expected, and for much of the left in Greece, there is a real fury that something like this dared to develop without them. There is a painful irrelevance settling in on strategies that have no faith in the people and their uprisings, and instead wish to fold everything into official political arena and its parliament.

The one thing in this experience that I have been most impressed with was the KOE’s creativity and willingness to shift when something unexpected happens, and at the same time holding on to a revolutionary strategy. Without calling for imposing a very different situation on our own in the U.S., I will say that I think there is a great deal to learn from the methods of revolutionaries like the KOE and others. And there are also things to learn about the intense tensions this has produced in and around KOE – as they try to resist tailing a new movement, as they try to replace discarded assumptions, and as they face inevitable generational differences (which are naturally intensified by new and younger recruitment).

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Posted in >> analysis of news, comintern, communism, Eric Ribellarsi, Greece, Kasama, Kasama pamphlets, Maoism, New Com. Movement, theory, vanguard party, winter has its end blog | Leave a Comment »

TNL’s Thought Experiment: What should revolutionaries have done?

Posted by Tell No Lies on July 12, 2011

We could follow the old dictum and “let the dead bury the dead.” But there is value in thinking through how the communist movement of the 1980s and 1990s might have avoided the “cindering out” that engulfed today’s RCP.

In the following exchange, Tell No Lies and Mike Ely each give their own versions of what they saw, and what we might have done.

Chuck (CWM) triggers the exchange by repeatedly suggesting that those frustrated by disagreements within the RCP should simply have dropped out and found something else to do.

Tell No Lies:

No other revolutionary project just waiting

“Perhaps Mike and others in the RCP should have ditched the RCP en masse in the early 90s to join Love and Rage and fought to make IT a better organization. It certainly would have been helpful. They would have brought a level of skills, discipline and seriousness that we sorely needed. But I have no difficulty understanding why they didn’t.”

Chuck writes:

“there were/are a whole range of non-Leninist revolutionary groups.”

Oh yeah? Name them. Name a single non-Leninist revolutionary organization that was around for the duration of Mike’s tenure in the RCP (from the 70s until the middle of this past decade.

Name a single non-Leninist revolutionary organization that demonstrated anything like the organizational capacity of the RCP — its national presence, its press, its bookstores, its “mass formations”?

Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in >> analysis of news, Kasama, Kasama collectives, Mike Ely, RCPUSA, Tell No Lies, vanguard party | 40 Comments »

The Russian Experience: Where revolutionaries began

Posted by onehundredflowers on May 31, 2011

What is the relationship between strategy and tactics?  How should revolutionaries prepare for decisive struggles?  What form of organization should they build?   How do they build it?

Although written in 1901, these questions continue to challenge new generations of radicals.  We’re posting it here as part of our ongoing discussion on revolutionary strategy.

This was originally on marxists.org.

Where to Begin?

V.I. Lenin

In recent years the question of “what is to be done” has confronted Russian Social-Democrats with particular insistence. It is not a question of what path we must choose (as was the case in the late eighties and early nineties), but of what practical steps we must take upon the known path and how they shall be taken. It is a question of a system and plan of practical work. And it must be admitted that we have not yet solved this question of the character and the methods of struggle, fundamental for a party of practical activity, that it still gives rise to serious differences of opinion which reveal a deplorable ideological instability and vacillation. On the one hand, the “Economist” trend, far from being dead, is endeavouring to clip and narrow the work of political organisation and agitation. On the other, unprincipled eclecticism is again rearing its head, aping every new “trend”, and is incapable of distinguishing immediate demands from the main tasks and permanent needs of the movement as a whole. This trend, as we know, has ensconced itself in Rabocheye Dyelo.[3] This journal’s latest statement of “programme”, a bombastic article under the bombastic title “A Historic Turn” (“ListokRabochevo Dyela, No. 6[4]), bears out with special emphasis the characterisation we have given. Only yesterday there was a flirtation with “Economism”, a fury over the resolute condemnation of Rabochaya Mysl,[5] and Plekhanov’s presentation of the question of the struggle against autocracy was being toned down. But today Liebknecht’s words are being quoted: “If the circumstances change within twenty-four hours, then tactics must be changed within twenty-four hours.” There is talk of a “strong fighting organisation for direct attack, for storming, the autocracy; of “broad revolutionary political agitation among the masses” (how energetic we are now—both revolutionary and political!); of “ceaseless calls for street protests”; of “street demonstrations of a pronounced [sic!] political character”; and so on, and so forth.

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Posted in >> analysis of news, communism, Communist Party, Lenin, revolution, Socialism, Soviet history, V.I. Lenin, vanguard party | 2 Comments »

Dead ends & road maps: Building a new socialist movement

Posted by Mike E on May 17, 2011

“Instead of membership organizations, Hal Draper called for the formation of political centers, which would focus on publishing socialist political literature.

“According to Draper,

‘A political center has an enormous advantage over the sect’s National Committee or Central Committee which issues directives, theses, disciplinary cases, etc. to its micro-empire of mini-branches. That is: the former’s relations with local clubs, socialist groups, trade-union groups, workers’ groups, and individual activists can be infinitely varied and flexible. But the latter’s relations are dichotomized into two types: with members, the relation rigidified by the by-laws; with non-members, a relation hampered by an organizational barrier.’

“In place of national membership organizations, Draper’s position was that socialists should form local circles, in their workplaces, schools, or cities.… Draper argued that these circles should establish loose national connections.

“…they should, make contact with a political center that makes sense from your own point of view, for help in literature, advice, and outside linkups, and work with it to whatever extent you find useful. But there is no reason against having this relationship with more than one political center, if they suit your own political views. Such a political center may even be a sect; but if you do not join it, it relates to you only as one political center among others. This relationship is a hang-loose relationship: if you do not have a vote in deciding its affairs, it is likewise true that it cannot tell you what to do by exerting its sect ‘discipline’ over your own judgment. You do not erect an organizational barrier between you as the adherent of one sect and someone else who cleaves to another sect or none. In your work, you use whatever literature you wish, whatever their source…

“If enough take this course to break up the sect system, that would be a good thing for the future potentialities of an American socialist movement.”

* * * * * * *

Kasama has received this piece from Dan Damage, an activist in Minneapolis who was a member of Socialist Alternative for many years. We are posting excerpts. The full essay will soon appear in  Cultural Logic: an electronic journal of marxist theory and practice — within the mid-June special issue on Culture and Crisis.

Road maps, dead ends, & the search for fresh ground:
How can we build the socialist movement in the 21st century?

By Dan Damage

“It is easy for good to triumph over evil, if only angels will get organized along the lines of the Mafia.”
Kurt Vonnegut

I can’t shake the feeling that despite our best intentions, we are wasting resources by taking roads that lead to nowhere. It doesn’t help that the main form of organization – tiny, competing groups divided by marginal differences – is out of tune with the content of our aims – “the full material and spiritual liberation of the toilers.” I’ve come to feel that all the heroic effort in the world cannot invest inherently barren forms with meaning…

An outside observer might suppose this should be a historic time for the socialist movement. The global economic crisis has discredited capitalism in the minds of millions. … Unfortunately, this atmosphere has translated into few appreciable gains for the socialist movement. … The question is whether more can be done, or whether the weakness of the movement today is an inevitable outcome of the period we are in. …

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Posted in >> analysis of news, communism, Communist Party, Marxist theory, Socialism, vanguard party | 78 Comments »

What Do You Mean, After the Revolution?

Posted by Harry Sims on March 18, 2011

This essay raises some important strategic questions for revolutionaries: specifically, how capitalist restoration is carried out and how revolutions can fight against that restoration while exploring issues of the dictatorship of the proletariat. It should be expressed that posting this does not imply endorsement with the views of the author, but we share in the hopes to spur deeper conversations about the nature of these issues.

This first appeared on angrymarxists. Props to  People of Color Organize who brought it to our attention.

What Do You Mean, After the Revolution?

by irateadri

As someone who has recently broken with anarchism, and as someone who had till then been an anarchist for the better part of a decade (almost since I first became interested in politics), it has been instructive for me to read for the first time what Marxists say about revolutionary struggle after the overthrow of the old, capitalist state has been successful. It is not often talked about by anarchists, who nowadays shun anything that might sound the least bit authoritarian, and when it does come up, the Marxists are abused with lies and strawmen of all kinds. I’ve come to find, in the few weeks since my deconversion from anarchocommunism, that the anarchists and the Marxists have radically different understandings of what revolution is, its purpose, and how it is carried out. Whereas anarchists see revolution as a struggle primarily focused on overthrowing the state, Marxists see revolution as a constant, living process, devoted to the destruction of the old, oppressive ways of life that does not simply end when the first military seizing of power has been achieved. I now recognize that the Marxist approach is the only practical and informed method of achieving a free communist society.

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Posted in anarchism, Maoism, mass line, revolution, V.I. Lenin, vanguard party | Tagged: , , | 11 Comments »

How Revolution Defeats Electronic Curtain: Social Net + Sneaker Net

Posted by Mike E on January 31, 2011

In a parallel thread, we have been discussing the impact of governments suddenly dropping an “electronic curtain,” denying the people access to modern communications (by cutting off mobile phones, internet, social media, etc.).

By Mike Ely
Just as a general principle, i think any revolutionary movement needs to employ an approach that combines:

High tech + low tech + no tech

Meaning:

We should exploit all the fresh opening that new technology affords us, but we should not strategically rely on it. And we should expect (to put it mildly) that determined opponents will seek to deny the revolutionary movements both internal and external communications exactly at those moments when they are needed.

There is discussion ( but not enough!) of the problems of online transparency: that the linkages of online networks makes ongoing unobtrusive surveillance easy, and brutal government countermeasures (like roundups) possible when conditions require it.

There is that other weakness of online communications:

It is a principle of warfare that your opponents seeks to deprive you of key logistics and command-and-control just when their loss is most damaging. And part of their strategy is to allow you the use of vulnerable media, and allow you to rely on vulnerable media in the preceding period — precisely in order to be able to decapitate and disperse your forces when the key tests of strength emerge.

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Posted in >> analysis of news, Blogging, Egypt, Facebook, internet, Mike Ely, social networking, surveillance, twitter, vanguard party | 14 Comments »

Vigilance Without Paranoia: Confronting Infiltration

Posted by Mike E on January 23, 2011

by Mike Ely

For obvious reasons, the FBI attacks of the Freedom Road forces in the Midwest, and the exposure of police infiltrators there, has produced some important discussion about the problems of police agents and entrapment.

We have discussed this from many sides here on Kasama (most recently in connection with the exposure of “Karen Sullivan” who infiltrated FRSO-FB in Minneapolis). We plan to continue to post materials that educate us all in the law, and in the evidence of police surveillance-infiltration-entrapment efforts.

I think there is value in stepping back and agreeing on some overall things:

1) The troubling expansion of political police powers (post-911) has recently produced infiltrations of secular leftist groups in the U.S. — that has the marking of a campaign.

Without hyping all this, I think we need to understand that the leap in domestic surveillance after 9/11 is major. And the creeping expansion of that surveillance (from Muslim communities to include the secular left) is a major change in that leap. And that the patterns of entrapment suggest that this is not surveillance. And finally, I think we should anticipate that campaigns like this can develop COINTELPRO like features (seeking to create divisions among the left, special targeting of left leaders, targeted attempts to weaken or destroy promising left centers, etc.)
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Posted in Communist Party, Mike Ely, police, repression, vanguard party | 14 Comments »

Party-Building: 20 Basic Questions on a Belief

Posted by Mike E on December 2, 2010

“It is fine to declare a belief.  But a declaration is not yet a plan or even an argument.”

by Mike Ely

Chicanofuturet writes in a longer comment:

“The question is how do we organize to take power? For communists and others this is the ultimate question.”

I think there are other “ultimate” questions, especially after the twentieth century.

Among them is:

* How do we avoid losing power once it has been “taken” — including to new oppressive  forces and programs emerging within the revolutionary party ranks?

* What does the experience of capitalist restoration (in previous socialist countries) mean for the process of preparing revolution now –  including in how our parties and movements are conceived, built and organized?

Second, you write:

“There can be no revolution without this type of organization. Anything else would lead to failure, anarchy and chaos.This is my opinion.”

This has been my opinion too for decades. But such an opinion can’t just be asserted (over and over) as if it is obvious. Nor is it clear what “this type of organization” is (without specifying it!), since many different models have proclaimed themselves as “this type of organization.”

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Posted in Communist Party, Mike Ely, vanguard party | 35 Comments »

Sites of Beginning Part 2: Nodules of the Advanced

Posted by Mike E on November 19, 2010

Nodules of gold, within veins of quartz, running along deep fissures of the earth's crust

This started yesterday with Sites of Beginning Part 1: Are Communist Openings Structural or Evental?

by Mike Ely

Let me start here: I listened to someone explain the formation of the Zapatistas.  The process  involved understanding that there were nodules or pockets of the very advanced in very particular conjunctural places among the oppressed people.

And those nodules — concentrated in particular regions, and in this case, within the Catholic lay structure — involved the emergence of  literate, energetic and very radical circles within the people themselves, who were able to  “hook up” with organized revolutionary intellectual forces  (from outside) in ways that are mutually transformative.

I think that the previous communist movements have not been able to find or connect with such advanced forces (in the U.S., in several decades.)  I  think our previous communist movement was perhaps able to “see” them sometimes, but not know what to do with them.

Particularly: I don’t think our movement was able to transform itself in order to fuse with the advanced (in those specific moments over decades where they emerged and the movement ran across them). Certainly our movement was not able  (through and with them) to develop a partisan connection to the broader people (which would need to happen in the course of  powerful moments of struggle).

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Posted in communism, Kasama, Maoism, Mike Ely, New Com. Movement, vanguard party, working class | 15 Comments »

Zizek: Contemporary China and “the party-state”

Posted by John Steele on October 19, 2010

This review of The Party: The Secret World of China’s Communist Rulers by Richard McGregor was originally published in the London Review of Books.

The notion of the Party-state cannot do justice to the complexities of 20th-century Communism: there is always a gap between Party and state, and the Party functions as the state’s shadowy double. Dissenters call for a new politics of distance from the state, but they don’t recognise that the Party is this distance: it embodies a fundamental distrust of the state, its organs and mechanisms, as if they needed to be controlled, kept in check, at all times.

Can you give my son a job?

Slavoj Žižek

Khrushchev’s speech in 1956 denouncing Stalin’s crimes was a political act from which, as his biographer William Taubman put it, ‘the Soviet regime never fully recovered, and neither did he.’ Although it was plainly opportunistic, there was just as plainly more to it than that, a kind of reckless excess that cannot be accounted for in terms of political strategy. The speech so undermined the dogma of infallible leadership that the entire nomenklatura sank into temporary paralysis. A dozen or so delegates collapsed during the speech, and had to be carried out and given medical help; one of them, Boleslaw Bierut, the hardline general secretary of the Polish Communist Party, died of a heart attack. The model Stalinist writer Alexander Fadeyev actually shot himself a few days later. The point is not that they were ‘honest Communists’: most of them were brutal manipulators without any illusions about the Soviet regime. What broke down was their ‘objective’ illusion, the figure of the ‘big Other’ as a background against which they could exert their ruthlessness and drive for power. They had displaced their belief onto this Other, which, as it were, believed on their behalf. Now their proxy had disintegrated.

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Posted in book review, China, Communist Party, Krushchev, Slavoj Žižek, vanguard party | 68 Comments »

 
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